Hayes, CharlesNiatum, DuaneRoth, PaulLocke, DuaneBritt, AlanWade, DavidCollier, Richard I.Lewis, LawrenceWolven, FredStarr, William J.Smith, Arthur E.Finch, PeterMcDonald, BarrySuarez, NicoScheibli, SilviaMacQueen, JamesFazio, DamonLocke, DuaneSuarez, Nico, TranslatorMeats, Stephen, Assistant2018-12-182018-12-181975http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11868/610Ut seeks immanentist poems. An immanentist poem fuses the self, the thing, and the world into a new, unique, and substantial reality. The fusion begins with bare attention and ends in an alteration of the consciousness. The alteration overcomes the illusions of conceptualism and the public non-reality of Western rational orientation and allows emancipation from the profane and rebirth to a sacred mode of being.Immanentist poetry is brother to Surrealism, Jung's Sychronicity, Assagioli's Psychosynthesis, Maslow's Peak Experience and B-Cognition, R.D. Laing's Transcendental Experience, Masters and Houston's Mind Games, the Ecology Consciousness, the Zen Zoan, Tao, Yoga, Tantric Tibetan Buddhism's exorcism of abhutaparikalpa, Agehananda Bharati's view of Mantra communication, Castaneda's non-ordinary reality, Smohalla, Mircea Eliade's Sacred, Shamanism, etc.UT Review: A Continuing Anthology of Immanentist and Other Poetries. UT Review was published from 1972-1982. It was preceded by Poetry Review, published 1964-1971, and succeeded by Abatis, published 1972-1982, and Tampa Review published 1988-present.en-USAmerican poetry -- 20th century -- PeriodicalsUT Review (1975) Vol.3 No.3UT ReviewUT Review: A Continuing Anthology of PoetryBook